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After My Husband Claimed a Fake Treasure, I Ended Us Novel Cover

After My Husband Claimed a Fake Treasure, I Ended Us

The scrape of metal against dry earth was a sound so foreign in our backyard that I actually left the kitchen sink to investigate. Through the window, the late afternoon sun beat down in a suffocating glare, illuminating my husband, Lennon, elbow-deep in the hydrangeas. He was sweating through his designer polo—a shirt I had paid for—wielding a garden trowel with the clumsy irritation of a man who hadn't done a chore in five years. His mother, Margaret, had likely complained about the weeds again, and as usual, Lennon was performing just enough labor to claim exhaustion later. Then, the scraping stopped. Lennon dropped to his knees, his manicured fingers digging into the loose soil. When he stood, he was holding something small and caked in mud. He rubbed it vigorously against his thumb, holding it up to the harsh sunlight. Even from the window, I recognized it. It was a heavy resin bead, cloudy and slightly chipped, that I had bought for three dollars at a Brooklyn flea market years ago.
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Chapter 1

The scrape of metal against dry earth was a sound so foreign in our backyard that I actually left the kitchen sink to investigate. Through the window, the late afternoon sun beat down in a suffocating glare, illuminating my husband, Lennon, elbow-deep in the hydrangeas.

He was sweating through his designer polo—a shirt I had paid for—wielding a garden trowel with the clumsy irritation of a man who hadn't done a chore in five years. His mother, Margaret, had likely complained about the weeds again, and as usual, Lennon was performing just enough labor to claim exhaustion later.

Then, the scraping stopped.

Lennon dropped to his knees, his manicured fingers digging into the loose soil. When he stood, he was holding something small and caked in mud. He rubbed it vigorously against his thumb, holding it up to the harsh sunlight.

Even from the window, I recognized it. It was a heavy resin bead, cloudy and slightly chipped, that I had bought for three dollars at a Brooklyn flea market years ago. I had buried it near the roots of a dying rosebush on a whim, a silly marker for a plant that never bloomed.

Lennon didn't see a cheap piece of resin. His posture shifted, his spine snapping straight as a feverish energy took hold of him. He pulled out his phone, snapped a picture of the dirt-streaked trinket, and aggressively tapped out a message.

Minutes later, his phone chimed. I watched his face through the glass. The irritation vanished, replaced by a wide, breathless smile. His eyes went dark and wide with a sudden, consuming hunger. He looked at the bead, then back at the house, and in that split second, I saw a stranger.

By the time evening settled over the house, the air conditioning was struggling against the July heat, leaving the living room thick and stifling. I sat on the sofa, folding the laundry Lennon had stepped over all week.

He paced the length of the rug. He was practically vibrating, his knuckles white as he clenched his hands in his pockets.

"Sit down, Lennon. You're wearing a hole in the floor," I said, my voice steady, though a quiet alarm bell had begun to ring at the base of my skull.

He stopped, turning to face me. He didn't look guilty. He looked triumphant.

"I want a divorce, Blair."

The words dropped into the heavy air. No hesitation. No preamble.

My hands stilled on a folded towel. I looked up at the man I had spent five years shrinking myself for. Five years of paying off his debts, swallowing his mother's endless contempt, and quietly working myself to the bone while he 'found himself.'

"A divorce," I repeated, the syllables tasting like ash.

"Don't play dumb. We both know this hasn't been working," Lennon said, his voice taking on a hard, patronizing edge. He stepped closer, looking down at me as if he had suddenly grown three feet taller. "But let's be honest about why you've stuck around. You like the comfort. You like what I provide."

I stared at him. *What he provided?* The mortgage, the groceries, the very shirt on his back—all of it came from my paycheck.

Before I could speak, he pulled his hand from his pocket and slammed it onto the glass coffee table. Between us sat the dirty resin bead from the garden.

"I know how you are, Blair. You'll try to claw at whatever I have," he sneered, his upper lip curling. "But this is mine. I found it. I had Dave look at the photos. He consults for auction houses. It's a Ming dynasty artifact. It's worth a million dollars, minimum."

I blinked, my eyes shifting from his flushed, greedy face to the piece of flea-market trash sitting on my table. *A Ming dynasty artifact.* The sheer absurdity of it hitched in my chest, a laugh that twisted into something deeply hollow.

He really believed it. He had found a piece of plastic in the dirt and immediately decided he was a millionaire—and his very first instinct, before the dirt was even washed from his hands, was to discard me.

"A million dollars," I said softly, testing the weight of his delusion.

"Don't even think about fighting me for it," Lennon snapped, leaning over the table, his eyes narrowing into cold slits. "I'm keeping it. All of it. But I'm not a monster. I'll let you keep this house as your sole settlement. We sign the papers this week, clean break. You get the house, I keep my antique. Deal?"

He was practically vibrating with the desperation to cut me loose before I could touch his imaginary fortune.

My hand drifted up, my fingers brushing the cool silver chain of my necklace—the only thing my late adoptive mother had left me. Its solid weight grounded me. Beneath my quiet, exhausted exterior, a glacial calm began to spread. He didn't know who I was. He didn't know the empire that ran in my blood, the Edwards fortune I had walked away from just to build a simple, honest life with him.

I looked at the bead, and then up into the arrogant, hollow eyes of my husband.

"Alright, Lennon," I said, my voice as smooth and cold as glass. "I'll take the house. You keep your treasure."

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